Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Wang M" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Open-source platforms to investigate analytical flexibility in neuroimaging Sanz-Robinson J; Wang M; McPherson B; Chatelain Y; Kennedy D; Glatard T; Poline JB; 40800896
ENCS
2 Exploring the glycoprotein washing fluid-assisted cleanup for the restoration of oil-contaminated shorelines with environmental integrity Sui J; Yue R; Bi H; Fu H; Yang A; Wang M; An C; 39260515
ENCS
3 Longitudinal brain structure changes in Parkinson's disease: A replication study Sokolowski A; Bhagwat N; Chatelain Y; Dugré M; Hanganu A; Monchi O; McPherson B; Wang M; Poline JB; Sharp M; Glatard T; 38295031
ENCS
4 Glucose-mediated repression of plant biomass utilization in the white-rot fungus Dichomitus squalens. Daly P, Peng M, Di Falco M, Lipzen A, Wang M, Ng V, Grigoriev IV, Tsang A, Mäkelä MR, de Vries RP 31585998
CSFG

 

Title:Open-source platforms to investigate analytical flexibility in neuroimaging
Authors:Sanz-Robinson JWang MMcPherson BChatelain YKennedy DGlatard TPoline JB
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40800896/
DOI:10.1162/IMAG.a.79
Publication:Imaging neuroscience (Cambridge, Mass.)
Keywords:analytical flexibilityneuroimagingopen sourcereproducibilitysoftware
PMID:40800896 Category: Date Added:2025-08-13
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 NeuroDataScience-ORIGAMI Lab, McConnell Brain Imaging Centre, The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital), Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
2 Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
3 Department of Psychiatry, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, United States.
4 Krembil Centre for Neuroinformatics, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Description:

Researchers in brain imaging have access to a multitude of analysis tools, many of which carry out the same or similar tasks but yield different results when applied to the same data. This analytical flexibility often undermines reproducibility and raises concerns about the robustness of neuroimaging studies. However, the array of software packages to investigate and address analytical flexibility is decentralized, scattered, and not well documented. Consequently, researchers often lack the necessary information and protocols to buttress the reliability of their findings across analytical tools. This review catalogs and describes software platforms (i.e., software or computational libraries) that can be used to address result variability arising from computational pipelines and environments and explores the use of computing platforms and neuroimaging pipeline frameworks in addressing this issue. This study offers guidance to the research community on accessing, understanding, and utilizing these platforms to address brain imaging analytical flexibility. Additionally, the article provides specific recommendations tailored to different user groups, considering the tools they intend to use with these platforms and their computational constraints.





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